So how are all the conventional historians going to explain this? The New York Times reports on NASA’s photographs revealing evidence of an ancient civilization in Kazakhstan, estimated to date back at least 8,000…

There are some treasures of prehistoric Britain buried under the North Sea and archaeologists are planning to uncover what’s being dubbed “Britain’s Atlantis,” per the Independent: Archaeologists are searching for the lost…

We can probably learn something from the fate of the large ancient settlements that failed. From Tech Times: Modern cities with large populations and dense areas tend to be productive. Remarkably, these…

Graham Hancock and his wife Santha Faiia investigated the mysterious underwater landscape at Yonaguni, Japan in a series of over 200 dives, well documented in his book Underworld: The Mysterious Origins of…

Abby Martin interviews author and philosopher, Graham Hancock, about the mysteries of ancient civilization, hidden societies from the past, censorship by TED Talks and the difficulty in getting these ideas accepted by…

In a lengthy Facebook post bestselling author Graham Hancock previews some of his research for a sequel to his number one bestseller, Fingerprints of the Gods: The Evidence of Earth’s Lost Civilization:…

The Museum of Icelandic Sorcery & Witchcraft houses the only known intact pair of necropants, a beyond-disturbing item popularly used for purposes of traditional magic in seventeenth century Iceland. To make your…

It sounds like the Satanic incantations hidden in the fadeout of Beatles album. io9 writes:

Linguists have recently reconstructed what a 6,000 year-old-language called Proto-Indo-European might have sounded like. This language was the forerunner of many European and Asian languages, and now you can listen to how it may have sounded.

Proto-Indo-European (PIE) was spoken by a people who lived from roughly 4500 to 2500 B.C. The question became, what did PIE sound like? As linguists have continued to discover more about PIE, this sonic experiment is periodically updated to reflect the most current understanding of how this extinct language would have sounded when spoken some six thousand years ago. Since there is considerable disagreement among scholars, no one version can be considered definitive.

For students of economics and ancient civilizations alike, the strange economy of the Incan Empire is fascinating. Annalee Newitz writes for io9: In the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, the Inca Empire was…

The International Business Times reports on the interplanetary origins of ancient human culture: A set of funeral beads which could be the oldest iron artifacts on earth actually came from outer space,…

Here’s hoping a nasty curse commences to haunt them. Via the Independent: A 5,000-year-old pyramid in Lima, Peru has been torn down by two private construction companies. The El Paraiso pyramid, located…

Your plans for where to go on summer vacation have officially been made: Archeologists have discovered an ancient Maya city which they’ve named “Chactun”, meaning “Red Rock,” in Campeche in Mexico. For…